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Terrestrial Dynamical Time zamân-e tavânik-e zamini Fr.: temps dynamique terrestre A uniform atomic time scale for apparent geocentric ephemerides defined by a 1979 IAU resolution, which replaced Ephemeris Time. TDT is independent of the variable rotation of the Earth, and the length of the tropical year is defined in days of 86,400 seconds of international atomic time. In 1991 it was replaced by Terrestrial Time. → terrestrial; → dynamical; → time. |
Terrestrial Time zamân-e zimini Fr.: temps terrestre The modern astronomical standard for the passage of time on the surface of the Earth. It is the → coordinate time scale consistent with the theory of general relativity for an observer on the surface of the Earth. TT was renamed from Terrestrial Dynamical Time (TDT) in 1991. The fundamental unit of TT is the day of 86,400 SI seconds. It is related to the International Atomic Time by the relation: TDT = TAI + 32.184 sec. → terrestrial; → time. |
test time zamân-e âzmun Fr.: temps de test That part of the working time of a telescope devoted to tests of coupled instruments or the telescope itself. |
time zamân (#), gâh (#), vaqt (vaxt) (#), tâmen Fr.: temps 1) A non-spatial sequential relation in which events occur in apparently irreversible
succession from the past through the present to the future.
→ time's arrow. M.E.; O.E. tima "limited space of time," from P.Gmc. *timon "time" (cf. O.N. timi "time," Swed. timme "an hour"), akin to L. tempus (genitive temporis) "time" (Fr. temps, Sp. tiempo, It. tempo); maybe related to Pers. Tabari tum, tomon, temen "time;" Aftari ton "time." Zamân "time," from Mid.Pers. zamân, jamân "time," zamânak
"period, epoch;"
loaned into Aramaic and Ar.,
loaned into Arm. žam, žamanak "time;"
prefixed Sogdian nγm "time, moment, hour;"
Proto-Iranian *gām- "to go, to come;"
cf. Av. gam- "to come; to go," jamaiti "goes;"
O.Pers. gam- "to come; to go;" Mod./Mid.Pers. gâm
"step, pace," âmadan "to come;" cf. Skt. gamati "goes;"
Gk. bainein "to go, walk, step;" L. venire "to come;"
Tocharian A käm- "to come;" O.H.G. queman "to come;" E. come;
PIE base *gwem- "to go, come." |
time allocation tesk-e zamân, ~ vaqt Fr.: attribution de temps de télescope The assignment of telescope time by an expert panel to proposals after evaluating the merits of the observation projects. → time; → allocation. |
time constant pâyâ-ye zamâni Fr.: constante de temps Th speed of response of a detector, usually measured as 1/(2πν), where ν is the chopping frequency at which the responsivity fails to 1/√2 of its maximum value. |
time delay derang (#) Fr.: retard 1) The amount of time required for a → signal
to travel from one point to another
in an → electric circuit. |
time delay distance apest-e derang-e zamâni Fr.: A distance-like quantity derived from → gravitational lensing time delay. It is given by a combination of three angular diameter distances in a strong lens system: DΔt = (1 + zL)[DA(EL)DA(ES) / DA(LS)], where zL is the → redshift of the → gravitational lens, while DA(EL), DA(ES), and DA(LS) are the angular diameter distances from the Earth to the lens, from the Earth to the source, and from the lens to the source, respectively. As each of the distance is proportional to the inverse of H0, DΔt is proportional to 1/H0. |
time dilation farâeš-e zamân Fr.: dilatation du temps A phenomenon related to special and general relativity. → time; dilation, verbal noun of dilate, from M.E. dilaten, from O.Fr. dilater, from L. dilatare "make wider, enlarge," from → dis- "apart" + latus "wide." |
time of periapsis passage zamân-e gozar az pirâhabâk Fr.: temps de passage au périapse One of the → orbital elements, the time when the → secondary body reaches → periapsis. |
time resolution vâgošud-e zamâni Fr.: résolution temporelle Same → temporal resolution. → time; → resolution. |
time reversal vâruneš-e zamân Fr.: renversement du temps A transformation operating on time in the equations of motion of a dynamical system in which t is replaced by -t. |
time scale marpel-e zamân Fr.: échelle de temps A measure of duration of a specific process, such as → crossing time, → dynamical time scale, → evolutionary time scale, → Kelvin-Helmholtz time scale, → nuclear time scale, → photon escape time, → relaxation time, → star formation time scale. |
time series seri-ye zamâni Fr.: série temporelle A → sequence of values of a → variable in successive time order, usually at fixed intervals of time. |
time zone zonâr-e zamân, zamân-zonâr Fr.: fuseau horaire Any of the 24 zones on the Earth surface delimited by → meridians at approximately 15° intervals. In each time zone a common standard time is used, and the time is one hour earlier than the zone immediately to the east. |
time's arrow peykân-e zamân Fr.: flèche du temps The sequence of all natural processes in which the → entropy increases. In other words, the fact that these processes all move in one direction in time and are → irreversible. The past is distinctly different from the future; things always grow older, never younger. → time; arrow, M.E. arewe, arwe, from O.E. arwan, earh "arrow," from P.Gmc. *arkhwo (cf. Goth. arhwanza), from PIE base *arku- "bow and/or arrow," source of Latin arcus, → arc. |
timelike zamânsân Fr.: genre temps Of, pertaining to, or describing an → event belonging to the interior of the → light cone. |
timelike interval andarvâr-e zamânsân Fr.: intervalle genre temps The → space-time interval between two → events if it is real, i.e. ds2 > 0. |
timepiece zamân-šomâr (#) Fr.: appareil horaire Any mechanical, electric, or electronic device, such as a clock or watch, designed to measure and display the passage of time. Zamân-šomâr, literally "time counter," from zamân, → time, + šomâr "counter," from šomârdan "to count," from Mid.Pers. ôšmârtan, ôšmurtan "to reckon, calculate, enumerate, account for," from Av. base (š)mar- "to have in mind, remember, recall," pati-šmar- "to recall; to long for," hišmar-, cf. Skt. smar- "to remember, become aware," smarati "he remembers," L. memor, memoria, Gk. mermera "care," merimna "anxious thought, sorrow," martyr "witness." |
transit time zamân-e gozar Fr.: temps de passage The time interval between the release of an electron at the photocathode and the arrival of an electron at the anode. Transit time is not a single-valued quantity, but has a bell-shaped distribution. |
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